Niall wrote:
ASPartOfMe wrote:
RetroGamer87 wrote:
There's something paternalistic and patronising about white SJWs telling minorities what they're supposed to be offended by.
It's called the SJW's favorite word, racism.
True, but this kind of behaviour is notable for its rarity (and even then my understanding is that views are mixed in the Latino community). It happens, but it's unusual. It's remembered as a bad example (and yes, I can cite others).
That having been said, it's a somewhat simplistic view of racism. Racism is as much - or more - about the systemic consequences of hierarchy as it is about attacking a black person in the street, just as ableism is more about our 85% unemployment rate than it is about calling an Aspie a r*tard.
Throwing around the word racist (or ableist) is easy, but the nuances need to be thought about. If anything, that's a big part of social justice campaigning.
My own preference is to side with social justice against social injustice, and not just when it's about Aspies.
I was not necessarily talking about about a white person telling a black person directly what they should be offended by, that probably is rare (unlike people telling autistics we should not call ourselves "autistic" and call ourselves "a person with autism" because "autistic" is offensive). It is a whole bunch of mostly white people screaming "racism" or "microagression". This is not rare in certain locales like college campuses. The media which banned using the literal word "n****r" in favor of the "N-Word" in all contexts is also guilty of something similar. The mostly white people who run these organizations made assumptions about what offends black people. That is a racist attitude.
"Racism" was once defined as the belief that people of certain race or races are inferior or prejudice against people based on their race. That was it. It has been changed to something to pretty much all white people are a part of intentionally or not. It has also been expanded to mean bigotry and prejudice against not only blacks but most ethnic groups. This was not done because it was easy but it was done to guilt trip people to advance a social agenda. The belief that being born white automatically gives you an unfair privileges is racism by the so called outdated definition because it makes a negative assumption about individual people based on their race. Because it is done for the greater good does not change this and two wrongs still does not make a right no matter how laughably quaint that idea seems in 2017.
Systematic racism is overdone because it is based on false assumptions about people in general. There is no mass conspiracy against black people consciously or subconsciosly (same with NT's against Autistics). There are groups of people and people in power that do conspire and make decisions based on racist views. But of most of if is if you are a minority of any kind it is usually going harder because often you are at a disadvantage for a number of reasons including bigotry. Decisions big and small are going to be made that hurt you. This is not necessarily systematic prejudice but the facts of life or life is unfair however you want to phrase it.
All the above does not mean efforts should not be made to ease these disadvantages. But "educating" people by expanding the meaning of words and intimidating people were flawed tactics to begin with that did help to ease unfairness in the short run in some cases but was overdone and has run its course.
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman